Chris in the UK

August - October 2022
I don't think I forgot anything. Read more
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  • Day 19

    The Steep End

    September 14, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    I woke up hungry to walk up and down Newcastle's slalom alleys and lanes, so we walked across the High Level Bridge and back across the Tyne Bridge. We were hoping for some hipster coffee but didn't succeed today. So we went for the other extreme: some really British coffee from Queen's Cafe just across the road from our flat. I heard a Geordie businessman in a great business suit order a bacon roll with brown sauce, and once I had googled brown sauce, I took a creepshot of him because he looked so good.

    After paying off some sleep debt later that morning, we went to Newcastle Castle via Dog Leap Steps (a dead seagull in a plastic bag on the top step, and a homeless person sleeping just next to the castle) and decided to do the full experience from the Castle Garth and Keep to the Tower with its narrow winding stairs, hidden rooms, and giddy heights. This was inspiring and very engaging, although I did feel fear at a few points - especially when walking past an oubliette called "The Heron Pit" and when visiting a tiny cell through a narrow hall where prisoners were kept until the assizes. Chilling.

    We went for a beer at Ask Italian and met a cute gay waiter who we learned was not a Geordie (from Newcastle) but a Mackem (from Seaham). And after that I went for a haircut and beard trim at The Hoi Polloi where my barber Jack Porter gave me a classy trim while being charming with a thick Geordie Accent. Mint!

    Dinner was Italian by the Quayside at Sambuca, and a walk along the banks of the Tyne looking at the reflection of the Tyne Bridge and Sage Gateshead.

    A sweet day.
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  • Day 21

    Limits

    September 16, 2022 in England ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    It's our last morning in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne as I type this from our posh renovated flat in Akenside House. This place was built as offices over a century ago with a granite lower storey (now Akenside Traders Tavern) and three floors of sandstone. Our flat at the top has sandstone lions standing aflank the windows. The view looks down on Akenside Square, the Tyne Bridge, the Tyne River, and over a clutter of Victorian rooftops. For all my love of hotels and the way they keep throwing clean towels at you, it's hard not to appreciate that no hotel would ever have given us this location at this price.

    Yesterday was a slower day, and I needed a slower day. In fact I still need more slow days so I can work. I tried to do an illustration yesterday and couldn't get anywhere in the 1 hour I had. It's all starting to feel like life back home: persistently out of this weird mystical tripartite substance I call TimeFocusEnergy.

    Stuart was feeling brave and volunteered to get our Sherman Tank out of its tiny mousehole carpark and drive us to Hadrian's Wall. This was easier driving than York or Harrogate: it takes a second to get outside the city limits of Newcastle, and once you're out, things are wide and fine. We plugged "Hadrian's Wall" into Google Maps on my phone and just let the algorithm decide where we should go. After all, Hadrian's Wall slices Great Britain left to right, and people walk the whole length. Theoretically we could visit the wall at many points.

    Google decided we should go to Birdoswald, a very intact garrison with a cafe, toilets, informative posters, and yes, a souvenir shop. Google knows us so well. This was a great choice.

    The very first thing the attendant Maura did was to try and sell us an $80 ticket to all the English Heritage sites - just to save us money, you understand - and preceded to ask us how long we were staying and where were we going? Who the hell did Maura think she was? Google?

    My face morphed into some menacing artifact while Maura plied her sales techniques on us. Stuart stayed blithe and informed her that our next stops would be Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Inverness. Maura recoiled at the mention of those places and ceased all sales efforts. Those are in Scotland, and this heritage is English heritage only. Maura was herself Scottish, by the way. She claimed she only wanted to save us money because she was a Scot haha, which is a joke that would've landed if I hadn't been so unimpressed with supersizing, bundling, upgrades, and add-ons. But anyway, when we invoked those Scottish places on the Southern side of the wall, we were given tickets and sent away, encouraged to enjoy the archaeological site.

    I enjoyed the morning well enough. The exhibition itself had some anti-colonial and anti-racist flavours in it that I especially appreciated. There was a cartoon of an Indigenous person flinching underneath Roman speers saying to the viewer "How would you like it if your home was invaded?" This was the same sentiment I saw curated as part of the Jorvik Viking Museum: this honesty about colonialism.

    And it also underscored something about the English that I've never really appreciated before: the English believe that invasion and colonisation is an inevitable part of reality because they've been invaded and colonised multiple times. Little wonder that they should feel justified in colonising more of the world than anyone else: they believe it's either settle or be settled.

    We had cold bright weather standing there at the very limits of the Roman Empire. I was really haunted by the spectre of what happened in the 5th century with the Romans leaving. I don't understand why Empires withdraw and relinquish, but I need to understand it. Because my history education has this massive gap between the Julio-Claudians and Martin Luther (which is partly my fault, since studying history in my time was like taking an empty tray to a a cafeteria and filling it with only the morsels that look most appetising), I had always just assumed that the Romans basically... I don't know... assimilated.

    I was partly right. When the garrison at Banna (Birdoswald) was decommissioned, many of the people who lived there stayed there, and kept working there. And I'm sure they were governed - as Bob Dylan says, "You're gonna have to serve somebody" - but I don't know who by.

    Hadrian's Wall was a pleasure. There weren't many other tourists, and not much other traffic. The gift shop was anticlimactic, which is just bizarre to me because I arrived here with plenty of tourist dollars and a lifetime of dreaming. But a 60 pound jumper with a bland screen print of Hadrian's face on it? No. A cheap Chinese notebook with a wrapping paper pattern of no clear meaning on the front for 10 pounds? No. A 30 pound tee shirt that will fade within 5 washes? No. And as to the ten pieces of meretricious jewellery that one could find at a Boots Pharmacy? No, no, no. I bought a plastic cylinder of freckles (called "Jazzies" here in Cumbria) and left happily.

    That afternoon we walked down to Quayside for a beer (for him) and coffee (for me) and found a ridiculously pretty Art Nouveau building called "Baltic Chambers" across the river from the famous Baltic Flour Mill. The centre part had been turned into a cafe called "CatPawCino" and the corner had been turned into a "funky wee bar" called "The Hooch," which we entered. Stuart ordered a pint of Estrella (which the waitress mispronounced, making us adore her), and I had a Fentiman's Testosterone-Busting Rose Lemonade.

    But after that, I had reached my limit of TimeFocusEnergy. We went home and relaxed for the rest of the night, eating a Waitrose Quiche, listening to jazz, and doodling. This morning we move on to Edinburgh! But it's impossible that we should have better accommodation than this. Newcastle has been very kind to us; it is in fact a very kind place - cultured and honest too.

    I will come back here.
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  • Day 21

    The three night curse

    September 16, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    A note to my future self: do not book a slew of three night stays in a row. Make sure you have a six night stay somewhere in there. Because after three nights in Nottingham, three in York, three in Newcastle, the thought of three in Edinburgh, three in Glasgow, two in Inverness, and three in Bristol is super depressing.

    You can't really unpack for a three night stay, but you can't really keep everything in the bag either.

    I almost feel like I'm running a restaurant, and putting the tables and chairs out every morning, and putting them all away again every night. Sure, there's a romance in the ritual. But it can be a little deadening too.

    We were both tired as we packed up the Sherman Tank and got it out of the mousehole to take up north. The drive to Edinburgh seemed straightforward, and we picked a nice halfway mark for a coffee stop: Berwick-Upon-Tweed.

    This place was a surprise: a seaside cobblestoned nook, full of boutique stores and quaint village ways. It was like a medieval Nelson Bay. Stuart and I had an adequate "elevenses" in a sad quiet pub with Tudor beams, before we had an electrifying walk across the Tweed river, taking photos of the centuries-old buildings. Every street corner and every lane had something historic and picturesque in it.

    We walked past a cafe called "The Mule on Rouge" to go to a bookshop called "Interesting Books and Zines," a queer oriented counterculture bookshop curated by a handsome man named Ben. Stu and I bought some weird stuff - thrillingly weird stuff - and walked out of there feeling upbeat.

    The drive into Edinburgh was especially high pressured because we had piles of dirty laundry and we knew that with Queen Elizabeth's funeral, finding a place to get this done (within that oppressive three night window) would be difficult. We ended up finding a place in filthy-rich Stockbridge where we might get it done Express for a hefty cash gratuity. We'll do that tomorrow morning so we aren't complete derelicts by the time we hit Glasgow.

    Edinburgh is grotesquely fashionable. And all the buildings in our neighbourhood are posh Georgian manors and mansions. The people in the street are young, thin, and with disposable income that they are disposing off in Edinburgh. I am absolutely intoxicated with the luxury and the glamour. Hampstead was bad, but this is worse. I think I might have picked up a superiority complex in the queue at Waitrose. (One child saying in Heightened Received Pronunciation outside as we exited, "Mummy I can't remember the last time we even went to a Waitrose."

    We are settled in our AirBnB, but both a bit weary of all the moving on. It's hard to get attached to places you keep leaving according to a strict metronome rhythm. Ten cities in four weeks was too much. Never again.

    However, I am excited to have a bath tub again, which I will go and use now.
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  • Day 23

    I hated Edinburgh Castle

    September 18, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Let the record forever show: I hated Edinburgh Castle so much.

    I hate feeling like a mere corpuscle in a larger tourist body, coralled into a small area, plugged into a money extraction machine, and then dazzled with ticky tacky and glimglam. Does my hating it mean other people should hate it too? No.

    But does the fact that other people have a special connection to this place mean that I have to feel special too? No.

    I didn't feel special here. I felt absolutely unspecial. And after walking the block after block of the Royal Mile, and seeing the same ethnic themed shops (Fudge, Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, Fudge Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, Fudge, Cashmere Tartan, Whiskey, Keyrings, etc) I felt bludgeoned by the time I got to the seething shoal of tourists at the gates of Edinburgh Castle. Ugh. I hated it SO much.

    And I've noticed something happening with the way Scottishness intersects with Australianness. Many white Australians feel that Scottish ancestry somehow exonerates them from the white supremacy of Australia. They feel that Scottishness marks them as colonised people. As a result, the Scottish aesthetic has become deeply alluring to whites. Did Edinburgh Castle and the Royal Mile interrupt or challenge that nexus between whiteness and Scottishness? Not in the slightest. In fact the crowd was as replete with bigots as it was with progressives, and we were all equally enchanted.

    What is it about stone that promises authenticity? I would say that Edinburgh Castle is proof that stone can be synthetic too. I hated it. And I refuse to dismiss my insights as the curmudgeonly condescension of some spoiled narcissist; the tourist industry can be a complete shit sometimes.

    So let's draw a perimeter around that locus of capitalist infestation and mythopoetic bigotry and let me share with you some of the joys of an Edinburgh day. Because when Stuart and I were out of the river of tourist desperation, we both found the place properly enchanting, and not in a McDisneyland way, but because of its intelligence, its style, its coherence, its manners, its pace, its beauty.

    Our day started at a laundrette where Leith local Alison took two giant bags of washing from us and told us she would have them washed, dried, and folded by midday for twenty five pounds. She was all smiles and reassurance. A coffee and pain-au-chocolat underneath Penhaligon's Perfumery and we were ready to walk to the Royal Mile.

    Our journey took us straight to the Scottish National Gallery. We have a queer connection to this place: the best exhibition we have ever seen at the Art Gallery of New South Wales was "Treasures of the Scottish Galleries," when great paintings (Like John Singer Sargent's "Lady Agnew") came to Australia. It was astonishing how much we enjoyed that exhibition, so we had a fair idea that we would like Lady Agnew's home base.

    And the Scottish National Gallery is perfectly sized, perfectly staffed, perfectly curated. I don't see how the experience could have been improved upon. Stuart and I restricted ourselves to the early moderns - a passion for us both - and saw some Titian, some Raphael, and some lesser known artists. I was excited to see work by Hubert Robert ("Robert des Ruines") with one of his rococo ruin paintings after reading Susan Stewart's "The Ruins Lesson." Another coffee on the Royal Mile before...

    [this account of Edinburgh Castle has been redacted for obscenity]

    ...by which time we were exhausted. We picked up our washing and went back to the flat, ready to cry or collapse. My feet were killing me.

    Stuart and I made peace with each other and the unhappy visit to Edinburgh Castle, and went to buy some Eau de Parfum from Aesop - it smells so sexy on Stuart. This happens in same-sex couples a lot, you know, you try to buy a perfume for yourself and it turns out to work brilliantly on your partner's skin chemistry. This happened with Versace Pour Homme, too.

    We sat at Caffe Nero next to two Trans women, a man who looked like Santiago Cabrera, and a dog breed ending in -doodle, and I wiped down the table the Wet Wipes I carry everywhere, then stole some sugar and came home. We had a Waitrose Quiche for dindins and then watched an episode of Sandman on my mobile phone because our landlord didn't provide a television.

    I finished the night making art, taking paracetamol, and wondering if I had been too hard on Edinburgh Castle.

    I hadn't. It sucked.
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  • Day 23

    Okey Dokey

    September 18, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Day 24 of my induction into the cult of Waitrose. Today it was their Ginger Nut Biscuits. I am starting to get scared of what happens when I return to Australia and I can't go to Waitrose anymore. Am I supposed to go to Coles and pretend that this is living? That isn't living. *sob*

    I'm starting to sound like I'm from Stockbridge. In fact, Stockbridge has been a bit of a problem. I think I was basing my opinions about Edinburgh on this particular suburb. On Sunday Stockbridge really fanned out its tail. White yuppie couples with designer dogs queuing at the fromagerie and boulangerie for the most exquisite and overpriced morsels. I'm sure they're all progressive at heart, but its a luxury progressivism, a boutique progressivism.

    I felt all too implicated as I neglected a beggar, wandering with the other middle-aged well-offs to struggle with my choice of Viennoiserie. And wasn't it me who dragged poor Stuart into an artisanal craft shop to buy a bunch of exquisitely cool crap on Visa card? It was. The things I hate about Edinburgh are things I hate about myself: comfort, insincerity, insulation.

    (But Edinburgh Castle still sucks.)

    Out of TimeFocusEnergy, we got the car out and drove to the nearby Holyrood Park, a little oasis of crag in a Georgian sandstone wonderland. We took the short stroll up to St Anthony's Chapel and felt that joy one always feels in a ruin: even stone must bow before time's sovereignty. And I think it was good that we started the day reading an article by Stan Grant called "After Queen Elizabeth II's death, Indigenous Australia can't be expected to shut up. Our sorry business is without end," because it was a reminder that all these medieval stones are not bastions of civilisation in a sea of barbarity; it's always tempting to mistake the preciousness of ruins for signs of greatness.

    It was a joy to drive through the poorer (ie the normal) parts of Edinburgh too, away from the Stockbridge fantasia. We saw that not everyone here is a hipster. That little drive out of the postcode felt like waking up from a hallucinogen.

    We go to Glasgow tomorrow, and I know I say this a lot, but we have not had enough time here. The Glaswegian hotel clerk gave us a passive aggressive "Okey Dokey" which sounded like code for "You senseless idiots," but then again we did get a sincere "Okey Dokey" yesterday from Alison from Leith, so we've seen the yin and the yang of that idiom ... and the yin and yang of Edinburgh too.
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  • Day 25

    Out of the Edinburgh Bubble

    September 20, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    At this point of the trip, moving onto the next place is starting to feel like a household chore rather than a thrilling discovery. We've got packing up down to a fine art now, and we're leaving places earlier and earlier.

    So when we left Edinburgh it was without even a flicker of sentiment, only apprehensiveness about what driving into Glasgow would be like. But I was delighted to see the Edinburgh bubble burst almost the very second we drove out of the city centre. Suddenly the sandstone tenement and luxury lifestyle was gone. I saw a ratfaced girl with a sideways ponytail in an old tracksuit smoking a cigarette sitting on the footpath at a dirty bus stop and I felt like I'd seen the mother of God.

    I would see a thousand instances of this girl within my first day in Glasgow, but let's not get ahead of ourselves.

    Our intention was to get to our hotel, The Mercure, early enough to watch the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on their lobby television. But finding a park was not an easy thing: we had to drive a large loop around the centre of Glasgow three times, and talk to the receptionist twice before we even managed to get the car in the right place. This was 40 minutes of work.

    We missed the first twenty minutes of the funeral coverage, but got to relax somewhat for the big moments.

    Then the hotel receptionist advised us that they had no room for us. We were to be sent to the Millennium Hotel (now full of Ukrainian Refugees) for them to organise a third hotel where we might stay. We grabbed our luggage and walked two city blocks to the Millennium, to be told we were to be sent to the Grand Central Hotel, and that a taxi would collect us shortly.

    The one hour trip from Edinburgh to Glasgow was really a four hour trip from Stockbridge to the Grand Central Hotel, with plenty of angst along the way.

    After the taxi had dropped us off, I had to leave immediately.

    I had arranged to meet my friend Raymond whom I had met in 2016 on Twitter. Raymond was the third "online friend" I was going to meet in real life on this trip, but the oldest I've known. I had arranged to meet him "under the big pointy thing in the middle of the square in the middle of the city" - I now know it's the "Walter Scott Monument" - and from there to grab a coffee. Ray was as handsome and funny as his avatar, although a lot more outgoing; stories and jokes and memoir just bubbled out of him and his soft accent ranged in intensity, becoming most pronounced when he was laughing. I spent the whole time amazed that we were actually meeting. I thought it would never happen.

    I knew Glasgow would be a rough place. It's the one thing people know about it: it's rough. But I was still taken aback. Did I get too infected with privilege in Stockbridge? Glasgow is full of obvious and visible poverty, just like I saw in San Francisco and Dallas, lots of sadness and people begging and disability and homelessness and addiction. I don't feel unsafe, but I know cognitively it is unsafe.

    I saw maybe twelve policemen patrolling the city on foot yesterday alone. And on our post prandial stroll, we walked past the giant soup kitchen and then saw a bunch of noisy teenage girls laughing and smoking and jostling into the train station. They were apprehended and humiliated by two police officers because they were consuming alcohol inside the station. Above them, behind wood panelling, posh tourists were drinking alcohol in a mezzanine overlooking the station. The girls probably weren't aware of the double standard. As Jyn Erso said in "Rogue One," "It's not a problem if you don't look up."

    Our hotel - and I really only got to see it at the end of the day - is a wood panelled chandelier-strewn juggernaut, a real behemoth of Victorian luxury, actually part of Grand Central Station but soundproofed to the point where you'd never know it. We had a bite to eat at the bar overlooking the main concourse (patrolled by police) and I drank a beer I didn't know how to pronounce, then went back to the room to watch an episode of the Rings of Power before conking out.

    I wouldn't say I want to go home. But I am really tired of moving on.

    I could happily stay in a tent with a portaloo outside Toddington Services if I thought I'd be allowed to unpack for a whole week.
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  • Day 25

    Effortless fun in Glasgow

    September 20, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Meeting up with Ray for coffee yesterday was the last scheduled thing I had planned for the whole trip. The rest - apart from connections and check ins and such - is purely spontaneous. And so I couldn't help but feel, waking up this morning, that

    1. I was on the downhill part of the trip at last, and
    2. That the trip really belonged to Stu and I now, and that we were finally welcome to have a shit time if we wanted to.

    And that was all it took for me to have a marvellous time.

    We got ready slowly, and meandered over to the Millennium Hotel just to make sure we hadn't been double charged for the booking error. We hadn't. And so we took my friend Ray's advice and caught the tiny little underground train to Hillhead to check out either the University or the Botanic Gardens. You see? We hadn't even decided the reason for getting off at Hillhead when we caught the train.

    The underground was clean, quiet, small, and very orderly. None of the fiery soot smeared desperation of the Victoria Line to Brixton. This was like something out of Star Trek.

    After a Pain au Chocolat (Stu had a Tart Tatin) at Cafe Francoise, we settled on seeing the University and maybe Kelvingrove Park, not knowing what either of them looked like. Stuart took note of the name "Hunterian" and after seeing five different signposts pointing to "The Hunterian," we learned that it was Scotland's oldest Museum, and we decided to check it out.

    Even the walk there was incredible. The sun came out for us, and the University of Glasgow showed itself to us in all its sandstone glory: spires, lancet windows, crests, gargoyles, all sorts of gothic turns and turrets. A handsome young student with curly hair and blue eyes asked in a thick Scottish accent where the biomedical science building was. I said in a Gillard-broad accent "Mate, we're Australian tourists. We don't know where anything is," at which point he had the saucy audacity to pat my husband on the back, laugh, and walk off. Outrageous.

    The Hunterian Museum is a nineteenth century style collection of "discovered" artifacts, cabinets of curiosities, ancient spoils, stuffed animals, and dinosaur bones. No big surprises there, but what was surprising was that the collection was curated in a posture of self-critique. "Curating Discomfort" was displayed in huge letters behind the Plesiosaur skeleton. The plaques acknowledged the white supremacism of the museum's history, and even critiqued a statue of the "great" James Watt for his connection to slavery and slave money. This is WONDERFUL stuff, the exact opposite of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. By invoking critique and truth-telling, the Hunterian is able to be part of progress rather than a bulwark against it.

    Stuart and I were so impressed. We noticed a miniature model of the Hunterian as part of its display. In some ways, recursively, it had become an object of its own study.

    But the Hunterian isn't just a Museum. It's also an Art Gallery. Stuart and I went had some deliciously adequate food from the University cafeteria while the Public Sector Union - well, about twenty of them - stood outside protesting for "no fees" or maybe "fair pay." It was kind of ironic that the chant was "What do we want?" and the crowd didn't know whether to say "Fair pay!" or "No Fees!" so they just mumbled, and then the call "When do want it?" "Now!"

    I was glad to see them. I was a member of the Australian version, the CPSU, myself.

    Over at the Art Gallery, we looked at a very tight, tiny, tidy collection of masterpieces, including a working conservation of Gavin Hamilton's Hector and Andromache, a few shimmering Whistler's, and a portrait by Allan Ramsay that took my breath away although I don't know why. We were so taken with that collection (which curiously also included a miniature model of itself - I didn't dare look inside lest I see either a miniature version of myself, or, worse, a dollhouse inside the dollhouse) that we decided to see the paid exhibition as well, the house of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, one of the great geniuses of the Glasgow School and Art Nouveau.

    This was surprisingly moving. Mackintosh's house was breathtakingly coherent in how designed and deliberate it was. The elongated geometries, whiplash curves, minimalist clutter - the aesthetic had taken over every piece of wood, every piece of metal, every angle in the house. The only point of comparison I had was Norman Lindsay's house in Faulconbridge, but the Lindsay house was sensual whereas this was optical.

    I went batshit crazy in the giftshop, so high was I on art vibes, and the woman running the place suggested we finish up with an artisanal pastry at Broken Clock near Kelvinbridge Station. This was a delightful, airy, mint-green place run by two achingly handsome dudes who had the most celestial selection of patisseries. We had a mango and citrus slice worth crying over.

    Thence back to the hotel for my last holiday sketch in my little travel journal (a Mackintosh Chair), a Guinness, some chicken, and a walk around twilit Glasgow. We've had the most wonderful weather today, and we are happy.
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  • Day 26

    Shopping in Glasgow

    September 21, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    "Spiritual people" will tell you that we modern heathens will use all sorts of doomed, wasteful, shallow strategies to try and distract ourselves from the empty void that is our lives.

    Today I got to enjoy all of them! A tasty pastry for breakfast, a perv on the hot guys of Glasgow, buying luxury goods, drinking alcohol. And let me tell you friends, when it comes to the void that is my life, I say "Yes but look at this perfume I bought!"

    The day started before dawn. I went for a walk along the banks of the River Clyde while Stu paid off a bit of sleep debt. The river has an invincible prettiness that even Glasgow's worst ugliness could not diminish. And believe me, Glasgow was trying hard. Litter, fluids, graffiti, concrete, dirt, steel... I saw two gulls fighting over a rat corpse. (I took a photo, but I am a merciful correspondent and will not publish it).

    The sight of Stuart afterwards was eye bleach. We decided to go for a little shop, and went to Buchanan Galleries to look at John Lewis and see what all the fuss was about. It was a whole lot of fuss about nothing - the shop was kind of crap. We wanted to buy some aftershave and couldn't catch the eye of the staff. They probably would have been oleaginous and alienating anyway.

    A quick trip to Arran: Sense of Scotland to try some local fragrances, then to a perfume shop to get Stuart a new aftershave. (We settled on Dior Sauvage, a clean scent with a lot of pepper in it that is very popular). Some chocolates from Hotel Chocolat - my life was feeling SO meaningful by this point - and then a trip to Penhaligons, the Royal Perfumier, to get a bottle of Lothair from a sales assistant who looked like Richard Madden. It was just a wonderful shopping day.

    The rest of the day we plugged up the void with lager, chips, and a white chocolate raspberry cheesecake covered in rose petals overlooking Grand Central Station. If you like pleasure, Glasgow has pleasures aplenty.

    I don't know why, but I had this racist idea that Glasgow would be somehow rude or brusque or hostile or something. This has been contradicted at every turn. The manners and thoughtfulness in Glasgow have been exemplary. We have observed more courtesy here, not just by service staff but by pedestrians, beggars, commuters, students... over and above the courtesy we are used to seeing at home. I thought maybe I was imagining it, wrapped in a tourist cocoon or something, but it's inescapable: Glasgow has a genteel quality that belies its scruffiness.

    We go to Inverness tomorrow. I'm an absolute wreck. Maybe I should have taken the spiritual path after all. I'll think about that while I eat another ten chocolates.
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  • Day 28

    island's highlands

    September 23, 2022 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Plenty of people have already asked "What has been your favourite part of the trip so far?" but nobody has yet asked "What is your least favourite part of the trip so far?" Maybe they just assume my answer will be Heathrow Terminal 5 - which is a reasonable enough assumption I suppose.

    I think having a freak out in Nottingham (all the way to Derbyshire and back) has been my least favourite part so far, but burning out here in Inverness gets a solid silver medal.

    The cumulative result of too many short stays for me has been a sort of peregrination anhedonia, an inability to take delight in the most delightful possible travel experiences. I went to bed miserable last night, and I woke up even more miserable. As far as I was concerned, it didn't matter if Inverness were heaven or a shit-hole. My itinerary was starting to feel like a set of flash cards. I just wanted to get through it, which is no way to travel.

    Stuart was sympathetic, and he and I explored our options cautiously, wondering which elements of our sadistic itinerary could be removed without a lifetime of regret. We found a way to extend our Bristol stay from 3 nights to 4, and a place where we could stay in London near a tube station instead of in Cornwall, near a pixie. This will really help our final day in the UK. (Originally that final day involved a drive from Newquay to Bristol, a train from Bristol to Heathrow, renting a luggage hotel, and then spending the whole day waiting for our 9pm flight out!)

    Limping around Inverness tonight in our tracky dacks, breathing the cool mountain air, looking at the Platonic perfection of the River Ness, we wondered what sort of stay we could have had here if we hadn't been burned out. Maybe some other time, or some other lifetime.

    Shopping today consisted of a few fridge magnets, a Marks and Spencer Quiche, a book of short stories by Guy de Maupassant, and a London hotel. We will watch TV and conk out tonight.
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